I have a situation where i need to set an image in the background of <div>
and want it to resize according to the div dynamically. That means the height and width of the <div>
can change according to the data on fly. So i want the image to follow the <div>
.
thanks
3 Answers
You could rely on the CSS background-size property. See this tutorial - they apply it to the body element, but this could work with any <div>
. Basically, it would look like this:
.examplediv {
background: url(images/example.jpg) no-repeat center center fixed;
-webkit-background-size: cover;
-moz-background-size: cover;
-o-background-size: cover;
background-size: cover;
}
There are some filters that need to be applied to get IE to behave, but they are mentioned at the bottom of the post.
Resize images using jQuery
http://adeelejaz.com/blog/resize-images-on-fly-using-jquery/
var max_size = 200;
$("img").each(function(i) {
if ($(this).height() > $(this).width()) {
var h = max_size;
var w = Math.ceil($(this).width() / $(this).height() * max_size);
} else {
var w = max_size;
var h = Math.ceil($(this).height() / $(this).width() * max_size);
}
$(this).css({ height: h, width: w });
});
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Yikes.. that's over 3 years old. I would hope no one does that anymore. Simple CSS for that solution:
img {width:auto; height:auto; max-width:200px; max-height:200px;}
– rgthreeMar 30, 2012 at 22:20 -
1@rgthree: Post an answer. Others are providing clues, but not any real answers. Code doesn't get rusty, like a nail; if it works, it works. Mar 31, 2012 at 0:34
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@Robert Harvey I would reply, but chipcullen has the right answer (the question was about CSS-applied background images). Anyway, just lending a hand to avoid unnecessary overhead using javascript when browsers can natively handle this with CSS. A lot happens in 3 years to make things better and faster. No doubt your answer works, just not the best way any longer, that's all.– rgthreeMar 31, 2012 at 1:32
set the width attribute in your image tag to 100%, so it will completely reside in the parent tag.
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thats not wroking, this is what I am doing: <div style="background-image: url(images/searchBackground.PNG); height: 150px; width: 1276px;background-repeat: no-repeat;"> </div>......so it like it part of <div> properties– DhruvMar 30, 2012 at 16:36
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I think If you put the image tag inside the div tag then It may work like this <div><img style="width:100%" src="..."></div> Apr 1, 2012 at 4:02
<img>
or a background image for the div?